nacho wrote:I would think drivers with less comsumption would start with less fuel, why would they start Hamilton with more than Rosberg if it's himself doing a better work in being able to save more with maintaining pace?
About fuel. Finnish TV / Ossi Oikarinen said there was a rumour that the differences in fuel flow sensors made a little difference (two tenths) in qualy for Massa and Bottas so that Massa could extract more maximum fuel flow / maximum power on straights. Apparently Williams has five sensors to pick the best ones from but the top teams have over thirty to choose from.
1. Is it certain that they always start with less than 100 kg? 2. Two tenths over one lap is a lot not a little. It used to be what 10 kg=0,4s? I'm not disagreeing or agreeing knowing nothing about it but isn't it too much and conveniently a difference between pole and 2nd in Austria?
This is the problem with efficiency, fuel saving etc., F1 is a rather complicated sport and now there's a whole new, area with no certain facts. They should show along fuel used in the race - fuel at the start like in refuelling times. In Austria I remember seeing Alonso using much more fuel but does it mean he had to save it later or was he that heavier at the start? OK found it:
lap 24: Ham - 31,6 Rosb - 32,4 Alon - 33,6
lap 38 Ham - 49,0 Rosb - 50,9 Alon - 52,7
lap 54 Ham - 69,3 Rosb - 71,8 Alon - 74,2
Thanks for nothing FOM, this info is completely useless. Oh look Alonso used the most fuel, Rosb 2 kg more than Ham. Does in mean he'll be slower, needs to save or started heavier, that's very interes.. zzzzzzz
Edit: one more:
lap 68/71 Ham - 87,9 Rosb - 90,9 Alon - 93,8 3kg difference between Ham - Rosb and they all start under 100 kg.
Fuel consumption championship:
Hamilton
Williams -2kg
Rosb -3kg
Ferrari, Force India -5 -6 kg (93-94)
So let's say when Hamilton starts and goes past Alonso in the first lap he's 6+ kg lighter on top of car+engine+top speed advantage.